Nowadays, when you go see a big movie, you assume everything
is going to be computer animation and greenscreen, and nothing is real. But a
lot of the biggest, craziest movie stunts, past and present, have been entirely
practical. Here are some of the most complicated stunt sequences that were
created in reality.

Terminator 2:
Helicopter Chase

The helicopter chase in Terminator
2 was so
dangerous that the camera-man refused to film it. James Cameron ended up filming the
sequence himself with the help of a camera car driver. The
nighttime chase scene was not only incredibly dangerous, but also complicated
to orchestrate. Crew laid out ten miles of electric cable to light the scene.
At times the helicopter was only a few feet off the ground, and it really did
fly under the overpass on the Los Angeles-Long Beach Terminal Island Freeway.
It took three takes to film the helicopter crash. Cameron has called it one of
his most exhilarating moments as a director. The movie's budget was record breaking, the
largest at the time. $51 million of the budget was used for stunts and special
effects, including the chase scene.

Advertisement

Inception: The
Spinning Hallway

Christopher Nolan is known for his preference for practical
stunts over CGI. He works diligently to ensure that his cast and crew and pull
off whatever crazy scheme he's dreamed up. Inception is full of awesome
practical effects, but the spinning hallway is one
of the biggest and most complicated stunts ever. What began as a 40 foot
corridor grew to over 100 feet. Engineers worked for weeks to build the set,
which was suspended inside eight 30-foot-diameter rings. Each ring was rotated
using an electric motor. Every
detail of the design had to be perfect, or else they would have had major
problems with vibration and timing while the actors (not stuntmen!) were
filming. 500 crew members participated in the scene. The cast was given 2 weeks
to rehearse, overcoming the challenges of timing and motion sickness in order
to pull off one of the coolest scenes we've seen in years. Joseph Gordon-Levitt
was right when he said: "There's no substitute for real human energy and
performance."

Logan's Run: The Carousel Sequence

The stunts during the Carousel
sequence are considered
to be some
of the most complex flying wire stunts ever done for a movie. It involved
36 stunt people being lifted in sync with the revolving floor. The original set
up for the stunt led to tangled wires, and every person had to be untangled
individually, leading to a total redesign of the equipment And some of
the shots for this sequence had to be filmed upside-down, adding to the
complexity of the shoot.

The Amazing Spider
Man: The Web-Slinging

Sam Raimi's Spidey swung using computer-generated effects,
but Marc
Webb went a different direction. When stunt coordinator Andy Armstrong told
people he wanted to make our friendly neighborhood Spider-Man actually swing
they didn't believe it could be done. Getting him to swing from building to
building in New York City would
be no easy task, even with a talented team of stuntmen and engineers behind
him. But Armstrong succeeded, and in most of the swinging scenes in The Amazing Spider-Man, there's a
real person in the suit. Stunt directors Vic and Andy Armstrong
revolutionized the process for the film by building new rigs for Spider-Man to
swing from. Armstrong describes
it as "a little like cracking a whip." The 200-300 foot machines consisted
of a track being pulled by a winch with a stuntman on the end of the line,
being cracked like a whip. One of rigs was built over hundreds of feet above
Riverside Drive in Harlem, and they used it to swing a man through traffic down
the street. Skilled stuntmen worked for months with the rig to make the stunts
look as real as possible.

Transformers 3: Base
Jumping and Car-Crushing

Not everything in Transformers
3 is CGI. The death-defying
BASE jumping scene is one of the coolest moments in the franchise, and it's
all real. no green screen, no wires, just a couple
of guys flying around Chicago in wing suits with cameras. Michael Bay saw a
60 Minutes special featuring professional skydivers using wingsuits to soar
through the air like flying squirrels. He knew he had to have it for Transformers 3, and he made it happen.
In order to film the scene where they BASE jump off the Sears (WIllis)
tower they shut down parts of downtown Chicago. In addition to that insanity,
Michael Bay also destroyed 532 cars while filming the movie, a record
breaking number. But don't fear, these cars were never meant to survive. Bay
says: "These are cars that are flood damaged. And they apparently — car
companies give it to us because by law, they have to be crushed. So I am the
perfect guy to do that."

Mission Impossible: Ghost Protocol: Free
Climbing

For Mission
Impossible: Ghost Protocol, Cruise did many of his own stunts, including dangling
off the tallest building in the world, the Burj Kahlifa in Dubai. The stunt
wasn't as
simple as having Tom Cruise climb a building. The team brought a special
replica of the building from from Dubai to Prague so they could work out the
kinks in their plans. They even used 50-foot-tall lights to replicate the
temperature they expected the building to be on the day of shooting. The stunt
team and Cruise rehearsed
the scene for 200 hours before going to Dubai — an incredible amount of
practice for a scene that lasts a mere six minutes and forty-five seconds. In
order to film the scene, they had to design special safety equipment for the
IMAX cameras —because when you're 2,723 feet above the ground you don't want
any risk of falling. They also custom-built a wind machine that was stuck out a
window to blow on Cruise's clothes and hair. He was attached to a safety wire,
but when you're 123 stories up a cable the width of a piano wire doesn't give
much comfort. Other safety measures included 2 full time engineers on set and
all wires and tools being sent to an engineering facility to be brake-tested.
Thanks to all that careful planning and preparation, it only took eight days to
shoot the sequence. Stunt coordinator Gregg Smrz said of the experience: "I
think I probably aged 10 years."

The Dark Knight Rises:
The Aerial Hijack

From the first scene The
Dark Knight Rises, Christopher Nolan tries to top the insane stunts in The Dark Knight. The movie opens with an
incredible aerial hijacking. When Bane is held captive on a government
plane, his henchmen rappel
down from another plane to free him. They then destroy the plane, making it
look like an accident. Nolan and his crew spent
three days filming the stunt above the Cairngorm Mountains in the Scottish
Highlands. After some initial scenes were shot, the smaller plane was replaced
with a glider-mock up of the plane that had been rigged for the wings and tail
to pop off. After the stuntmen were safely off the glider and back on the
larger plane they cut it loose, letting it smash to the ground. Stuntman Dave
Brown says that they had to use a special helicopter pilot while filming
because: "When you get to that level of budget there's only a certain few
pilots they allow to fly. For a film the size of The Dark Knight Rises it costs around £100,000 a day to film with
full cast and crew, so they only use known pilots."

All the James Bond Movies:
So Many Broken Records

James Bond films are known
for their record-breaking
stunts. Many of them are in the Guinness Book of World Records, while others
just shock
us with their daring and expense. The highest bungee jump from a structure in a
movie occurred in GoldenEye. Stuntman
Wayne Michaels dropped 759 feet at the Verzasca hydroelectric dam. Live and Let
Die holds the record for longest speedboat jump in a film. Bond's speedboat
leaps over a road, jumping an unbelievable 120 feet. Rick Sylvester holds the
highest ski base jump on film record for the ski jump in The Spy Who Loves Me.
At the time the ski jump sequence was the most expensive stunt ever filmed. It
cost $500,000 and $30,000 of that went to Sylvester for daring to attempt the
jump. Looking at more recent Bond films,
the most cannon rolls in a car record occurred during filming for Casino
Royale. Stuntman Adam Kirley rolled an Aston Martin seven times with the
assistance of a nitrogen cannon. The amazing
train chase scene in the beginning of the most recent Bond film, Skyfall,
deserves a mention. Daniel Craig as Bond chases an assailant over a
train crossing Turkey. With only a few exceptions, what you see in the
movie is what actually happened during filming. No one can doubt that Craig is
devoted to his role as Bond.

Iron Man 3: Air Force
One Rescue

The film-makers enhanced
the Air Force One scene with CG, but the foundation of the scene was all
real. The Red Bull stunt team worked
with the Iron Man cast and crew to pull off what Executive Producer Louis
D'Esposito called "by far bigger than any kind of a sequence that's ever been
done like that before." They spent two months building a testing hidden
parachutes. In total they did six hundred parachute jumps and over four hundred
eighty hidden parachute jumps. Kevin Fiege said of the sequence: "In our
movies, there are certain things that you can do for real and there are certain
things that that you do with CG. And while we love CG and we'd never be able to
make a movie without it, if there's something that you can do practically, it's
usually better to attempt to do it that way. This was by far the biggest
practical stunt scene we've ever done in any of our films, bigger than anything
in the previous Iron Man films and bigger than anything in The Avengers."

The Matrix Reloaded: The Freeway Chase

The second Matrix
movie filmed
for three months on a 1.5-mile stretch of freeway that they built from scratch
on an old airplane runway at a former Alameda Naval Air Station. This movie destroyed 300 cars
donated by GM and required insane amounts of synchronicity to allow stuntwoman
Zoe Bell to ride between trucks ona motorcycle and avoid getting smushed.